| SENATORS DISAGREE
OVER CAMP LEJEUNE LEGISLATION
Bill would have DoD providing care to
those exposed to toxins. But, Sen. Richard Burr says VA should
provide care.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Yesterday we brought you news about legislation that would
help victims of contamination at Camp Lejeune. That article
here ...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/10/nf10/nfjan10/nf012910-3.htm
Now, it appears, there is a
glitch. See article below.
And, use our search engine for
more about Camp Lejeune contamination ... here ...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=lejeune&op=and
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Toxins in Camp Lejeune water 30
years ago still a problem
By Barbara Barrett | McClatchy Newspapers
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/nation/story/83
272.html?story_link=email_msg
WASHINGTON — Families of Marines stationed at Camp Lejeune, N.C.,
three decades ago might receive a sliver of military-sponsored
health care to address diseases caused by drinking and bathing in
toxic water.
Legislation passed by a key Senate committee Thursday would
require the Department of Defense to offer health care to spouses,
children and other family members who were exposed to contaminated
water at the base in the 1970s and '80s.
U.S. Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., opposed the bill, saying it takes
the wrong approach and will unfairly give false hope to thousands
of struggling families.
He and U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan, D-N.C., have co-sponsored a competing
bill that makes the Veterans Affairs department responsible for
health care. They say the VA would do a better job.
Their bill, offered Thursday as an amendment, failed along
partisan lines in the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, with
Democrats on the committee unanimously opposed. (Burr is the
committee's top Republican.
Hagan
does not sit on the committee.)
Instead, the committee approved legislation that requires the
military's health care program, called Tricare, to treat those
diseases directly linked to the exposure.
It's unclear yet how much that would cost, and how the military
would decide exactly which ailments to cover. Studies have yet to
provide direct links between the toxins and a variety of cancers
and other ailments among Camp Lejeune’s former inhabitants.
Burr and Hagan argue that the Department of Defense can't be
trusted to take care of Marines and family members to whom it has
spent decades denying a connection.
"I can't in good conscience agree to give these brave men and
women a false hope that they'll get health care," Burr said. "Do
you really believe the Department of Defense will accept
responsibility for this health care when it still doesn't accept
responsibility for the contamination?"
He pointed out that the U.S. Department of Navy has been ordered
by Congress to pay for a scientific study on the potential link
between exposure and disease, but that hasn’t happened.
And he threatened to exercise what power he could until his
amendment is passed.
"There will not be a Navy nominee considered on the Senate floor
until this is resolved," Burr said.
Thousands of Marines and their family members living at Camp
Lejeune were exposed to tap water contaminated with
trichloroethylene (TCE), tetrachloroethylene (PCE),
dichloroethylene (DCE), benzene and vinyl chloride.
Military veterans already are entitled to health care through the
VA system. At issue is where family members also might receive
care.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki warned the Burr/Hagan
bill could apply to half a million military dependents and cost
the VA $4.16 billion over 10 years.
Committee Chairman Daniel Akaka of Hawaii, who sponsored
Thursday's legislation, said he agreed with Burr that families
exposed to contaminated water should receive health care from the
federal government.
But he and other Democrats on the committee argue that the
Department of Defense has to be held responsible for problems it
created, instead of being allowed to foist health care coverage
onto the Veterans Affairs Department, which already struggles with
funding.
That view is endorsed by several major veterans groups.
"Family members would be better served under the Department of
Defense health care program," Akaka said.
He argued that the issue should be handled on the Senate Armed
Services Committee, and recommended that he and Burr meet with
that committee’s leadership, Sens. John McCain and Carl Levin, to
discuss Camp Lejeune.
His bill, unlike Burr's, also addresses contamination at another
base, Naval Air Facility Atsugi in Japan. There, families were
exposed to air-borne and water-borne toxins from an incinerator.
Burr, meanwhile, vowed to fight on in his cause for Lejeune
veterans.
He said he will continue to tie his and Hagan's amendment to other
bills moving through the Senate floor --"to everything appropriate
and inappropriate" -- until he can get President Barack Obama to
sign his proposal into law.
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